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Joycean and Molly
She made her Broadway debut in 1968 in Brian Friel's Lovers, then appeared in The Incomparable Max ( 1971 ) and such Joycean theatrical projects as Ulysses in Nighttown ( as Molly Bloom ) and James Joyce's Women ( 1977 ).

Joycean and .
* 1966 Rock-a-bye Babel and Two Fairly Tales, a selection of spoof nursery rhymes and fairy tales in which Unwinese surrealism almost reaches Joycean levels ; with Dewar.
Many noted Joycean scholars such as Samuel Beckett and Donald Phillip Verene link this cyclical structure to Giambattista Vico's seminal text Scienza Nuova (" New Science "), upon which they argue Finnegans Wake is structured.
Norris is also a well-known Joycean scholar, and plays a large part in Dublin's annual Bloomsday celebrations.
Its most prominent leader was David Norris, an English studies lecturer in Trinity College, Dublin, Joycean scholar and from the 1980s to the present a member of Seanad Éireann.
After battling moderate drug addiction, he abandoned his Joycean / Western vision quest and joined his old friend's band, the Grateful Dead, on the first weekend in September 1967, at the small Rio Nido, California gigs.
While Joyce's story is told from the perspective of the male barkeeper Humphrey Chimpden Earwicker, Erdman's work a combination of dance, mime, and Joycean stream of consciousness language focuses on the female psyche, as seen through the many incarnations of the main female character Anna Livia Plurabelle.
As Sollers indicated in Paradis, Joycean Christianity, like Sollers ' Catholicism, involves both the comic and the pathetic.
The opening scene of Joyce's Ulysses is set in this tower, which now hosts a small Joycean museum, open in summer time.
Others who have written for The Irish Press include the poet Patrick Kavanagh ; the broadcaster and journalist Vincent Browne, who was Northern Editor from 1970 to 1972 ; Damien Kiberd who was business editor ; his brother, Professor Declan Kiberd, was a columnist with The Irish Press from 1987 to 1993 ; the Catholic and feminist campaigner and journalist Mary Kenny ; sports writer and founder of GOAL John O ' Shea ; the novelist John Banville was a sub-editor, as was the poet Hugh McFadden ; the historian Dermot Keogh, and the Joycean critic Terence Killeen ; T. P.
The Pop Chronicles documentary reports that critics found the song " Sophoclean and Joycean.
The books exude a poetic reverie for the goings-on and small details of city life that is practically Joycean.
Burgess uses a style which owes something to both Elizabethan English and Joycean wordplay.

fashion and word
This core memory board, Part Number 50823 D8 7504-14166, and with layout artwork copyrighted 1971 by DGC, was organized in planar fashion as four groups of four banks, each bank carrying two sets of core in a 64 by 64 matrix ; thus there were 64 x 64 = 4096 bits per set, x 2 sets giving 8, 192 bits, x 4 banks giving 32, 768 bits, x 4 goups giving a total of 131, 072 bits, and this divided by the machine word size of 16 bits gave 8, 192 Words of memory.
The word despotism means to " rule in the fashion of a despot " and does not necessarily require a singular " despot ", an individual.
In St. Louis, Missouri, the word is used in a derogatory fashion similar to " hick " or " white trash ".
In St. Louis, Missouri, the word is used in a derogatory fashion in similar context to " hick " or " white trash ":
However, some written languages like Chinese, Japanese and Thai do not mark word boundaries in such a fashion, and in those languages text segmentation is a significant task requiring knowledge of the vocabulary and morphology of words in the language.
This mixing of pigments with chalks is the origin of the word " pastel " in reference to " pale color " as it is commonly used in cosmetic and fashion venues.
Red top tabloids are so named due to their tendency, in British and Commonwealth usage, to have their mastheads printed in red ink ; the term compact was coined to avoid the connotation of the word tabloid, which implies a red top tabloid, and has lent its name to tabloid journalism, which is journalism after the fashion of red top reporters.
: The sacred authors wrote the four Gospels, selecting some things from the many which had been handed on by word of mouth or in writing, reducing some of them to a synthesis, explaining some things in view of the situation of their churches and preserving the form of proclamation but always in such fashion that they told us the honest truth about Jesus
The defining year and turning point for models, fashion, and popular culture was 1990 when the combined power, beauty and influence of five women created such an impression on the world that a new word was coined especially for them: supermodel.
Nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs form open classes – word classes that readily accept new members, such as the noun celebutante ( a celebrity who frequents the fashion circles ), the adverb 24 / 7 ( as in I am working on it 24 / 7 ), and similar relatively new words.
One limitation of flash memory is that although it can be read or programmed a byte or a word at a time in a random access fashion, it can only be erased a " block " at a time.
While the use of the word commando came to refer to various elite special operations forces units in other countries in the world, South Africa retained it's original use as well as naming special operations forces units in this fashion.
The brewers see the term " pear cider " as being more understandable to the younger 18 – 34 demographic, and as differentiating their products from previous brands associated with the word perry, such as Babycham and Lambrini which are either associated with the female market or have fallen out of fashion.
In fashion, the word cape usually refers to a shorter garment and cloak to a full-length version of the different types of garment, though the two terms are sometimes used synonymously for full-length coverings.
A buzzword ( also fashion word ) is a term of art, salesmanship, politics, or technical jargon that is used in the media and wider society outside of its originally narrow technical context, often in an inaccurate manner, or for purposes other than the conveying of information.
Historically, even though the word sock is at least as ancient in origin, what men normally wore were often referred to as stockings, probably especially when referring to longer hose at times when they were the fashion for men.
In this work he explained how in the fashion world any word could be loaded with idealistic bourgeois emphasis.
fa ' afafine – facial ( sex act ) – facial feminization surgery – FACOG – faecal-oral route – fag hag – fainting – faithfulness – fakaleiti – fake orgasm – fake prostitution – falling in love – Fallopian pregnancy – Fallopian tube – Gabriele Falloppio – family – family planning – famosae – fantasy – fantasy play – fantasy role play – fart fetishism – fashion health – fat admirer – fat fetishism – Anne Fausto-Sterling – fear play – feces – fecophilia – fecundity – feedee – feeder ( fetish ) – feederism – felching – fellatio – female – female circumcision – female condom – female dominant sex position – female ejaculate – female ejaculation – female fertility after 30 – female genital mutilation – female impersonator – female masking – female prostate – female pseudohermaphroditism – female reproductive system ( human ) – female sex tourism – femaleness – fem-dom – femdom – femidom – femidon – femininity – feminine essence theory of transsexuality – feminism – feminist – feminist sexology – femme – femme fatale – fertility – fertility and diet – fertility awareness method – fertility clinic – fertility rite – fertilization – fetal genitalia – fetish – fetish clothing – fetish club – fetish community – fetish subculture – fetishism – fetus – fiancé – fiancée – fibroblast – fibroma – fibula – fidelity – figging – fimbria ( female reproductive system ) – finger cot – finger fucking – fingering ( sexual act ) – fire play – fist fucking – fisting – fisting sling – Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome – flagellant – flagellation – flamer – flatulence – Fleet Marriage – fleshlight – Wilhelm Fliess – flirt – flirting – Flirty Fishing – Florentine girdle – flowergirl – fluid bonding ( sexual practice ) – fluid monogamy – folie à deux – follicle-stimulating hormone – follicular antrum – follicular fluid – folliculogenesis – foot binding – foot fetish – foot fetishism – forced abortion – forced bi – forced bisexuality – forced chastity – forced feminization – forced marriage – forced sterilization – Auguste Forel – forensic sexology – foreplay – foreskin – foreskin piercing – foreskin restoration – formicophilia – Forms of nonmonogamy – fornication – fornicatory doll – fossa of vestibule of vagina – four-letter word – fourchette – fourchette piercing – foxy boxing – fraternal polyandry – fraternal twin – Free Hosted Gallery – free love – freemartin – frenar band – French kiss – French kissing – French letter – French postcard – French tickler – frenulum – frenulum breve – frenulum clitoridis – frenulum labiorum pudendi – frenulum of prepuce of penis – frenulum preputii penis – frenum – frenum ladder – frenum piercing – frequency of sexual intercourse – Sigmund Freud – Freudian psychosexual stages – Kurt Freund – friends with benefits – frigidity – frogtie – frot – frottage – frotteur – frotteurism – fuck – fuck of death – fuck-buddy – fuckbuddy – Fumoto no iro – fundiform ligament – fundus ( uterus ) – fur fetishism – furor uterinus –
Since the birth of nightclubs in town centres in Europe the use of the word rave had largely fallen out of fashion, however in recent times it is increasingly being used again.
According to Slocum, " All too often the word ' man ' is used in such an ambiguous fashion that it is impossible to decide whether it refers to males or just the human species in general, including both males and females.
Between 1689 and 1721-the end of the Great Northern War which had begun in 1700-the notion a " European " fashion evolved, reflected by a mass of title pages in which Europe appeared as the central word.
The word was occasionally used in newspaper titles, although it has long fallen out of fashion.
The girls refer to themselves as gyaru ( gals ), although this word is applied to several other fashion looks as well.
As Charisse Goodman put it in her article, " One Picture is Worth a Thousand Diets ," advertisements have changed society's ideas of beauty and ugliness: " Indeed to judge by the phrasing of the ads, ' slender ' and ‘ attractive ' are one word, not two in the same fashion as ' fat ' and ' ugly.

fashion and famously
Poppet ( 1912 – 1997 ), John's daughter by his second wife, married the Dutch painter Willem Jilts Pol ( 1905 – 1988 ) whose daughter Talitha ( 1940 – 1971 ), a fashion icon of 1960s London, married John Paul Getty, was famously photographed in Marrakesh by Patrick Lichfield, and, after a brief hedonistic life, died of a drug overdose.
Gwen Stefani famously dedicated her two solo albums as well as her multi-million dollar fashion line " L. A. M. B " to the Harajuku Fashion scene as her inspiration.
Krystle and Alexis famously brawl in Alexis ' cottage and later in a lily pond, hurl mud at each other at a beauty salon, and slide down a ravine together into a puddle of mud before their final showdown in a fashion studio in the 1991 miniseries Dynasty: The Reunion.
Most famously the sapsuckers ( genus Sphyrapicus ) feed in this fashion, but the technique is not restricted to these and others such as the Acorn Woodpecker and White-headed Woodpecker also feed in this way.
President Richard Nixon famously said in 1971 ( ironically, shortly before Keynesian economics fell out of fashion ) that " We are all Keynesians now ", a phrase often repeated by Nobel laureate Paul Krugman.
One of the shoes that Cox created incorporated a 6-inch platform that would become the prototype of a 9-inch pair later worn by supermodel Naomi Campbell, when she famously fell during a Westwood fashion show in Paris, France in 1993.
Romances reworked legends, fairy tales, and history to suit the readers ' and hearers ' tastes, but by c. 1600 they were out of fashion, and Miguel de Cervantes famously satirised them in his novel Don Quixote.

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